Archive for February, 2009

Tax Credit Information for Buyers!

Thursday, February 26th, 2009

After much investigation with the IRS this is what was discovered concerning the current first time home buyer tax credit.  However, there are revisions being considered right now in Congress with regard to a higher amount ($13,000) and also being available for all buyers of primary residences. I will keep you posted on these revisions if approved or amended.

 

1. Your buyer must close on a primary home by December 1st 2009 in order to claim the credit

2. Your buyer can amend their 2008 returns, if already filed, and claim the credit if they close on a home by December 1st, 2009

3. FHA buyers can borrow the entire down payment from a family member (they must qualify for the loan payments and the loan cannot have a demand term of less than 5 years) and can repay the loan upon receipt of the tax credit refund after filing their returns

4. Taxpayers who are going to buy their first primary home by the deadline may reduce their federal tax withholdings by the lesser of $8000 or 10% of the sales price and save (or place as additional monthly earnest money) the additional take home pay for the down payment. This may require an extended closing date depending on their tax bracket. They would need to file an extension, if qualified or an amended 2008 return if they close on the home after 4/15/09 to avoid penalties.

 

These are just some ideas of how to help first time home buyers utilize the new tax credit. Please strongly suggest they consult a tax preparer, CPA or visit the IRS website for tax advice when exercising any of these options.  Please feel free to pass these suggestions along to your agents.

 

Julie beaty

Vice President

SunTrust Mortgage, Inc.

ph (404) 456-1725

Top 10 People to Blame for the Financial Crisis

Thursday, February 26th, 2009

I love this article- I think it really speaks to who we blame- #5 is a good one!

By Stefan Swanepoel

TIME Magazine published last week their list of people they think should carry blame for the financial crisis. As controversial as one expect any such list to be, it is saturated with ‘the usual suspects’ and makes for an interesting read. Here they are the Top 10 in order.

  1. Angelo Mozilio

    Co-founder and former CEO of mortgage-lender Countrywide. Countrywide wasn’t the first to make exotic mortgages to borrowers with questionable ability to repay, but it did, in its all-out embrace of such sales, legitimize the notion that practically any adult could handle a big, fat mortgage. When Bank of America bought Countrywide in 2008, it allegedly had to pay billions to settle predatory lending claims waged against Countrywide.

  2. Phil Gramm
    Gramm used his post as chairman of the Senate Banking Committee from 1995-2003 to champion financial deregulation. These two moves by Gramm were especially significant in their role in the financial crisis: 1) Gramm helped ensure that credit-default swaps were exempt from regulation by the Commodity Futures Tranding Commission, and 2) Gramm helped repeal the Glass-Steagall Act, which had separated commercial banks and Wall Street.

  3. Alan Greenspan
    Greenspan was vocal in his disdain for regulation. It was this anti-regulation mentality in combination with the Federal Reserve Chairman’s insistence on keeping interest rates low in the early 2000s that helped bring about the mortgage crisis. Greenspan has since admitted that his avid deregulation stance was somewhat of a “mistake.”

  4. Christopher Cox
    As the former chief of the SEC, Cox presided over an era of fairly lax regulation. Even though the number of investment advisors grew, the SEC did not bring on more enforcement and compliance officers to help oversee the industry.

  5. The American Consumer
    It’s easy to blame the Wall Street fat cats, the excess-loving CEOs and the government. But we should take a long hard look at our role as American consumers in the financial meltdown.

    Household debt in America jumped to more than 130% of income in 2007. Yes, ladies and gentleman, we lived beyond - way, way beyond - our means, and now we’re paying the price.

  6. Hank Paulson
    Paulson, a former Goldman Sachs exec became Treasury Secretary in 2006. He ended up almost single handedly running the country’s economic policy for the last year of the Bush Administration. That’s some power. But did he make the right moves? Maybe not. The main complaints about Paulson are: 1) he was late in starting to aggressively battle the financial crisis, 2) he should not have let Lehman Brothers fail, and 3) bailout bill was a mess.

  7. Joe Cassano

    Before the financial-sector meltdown, few people had ever heard of credit-default swaps (CDS). They are insurance contracts — or, if you prefer, wagers — that a company will pay its debt. As a founding member of AIG’s financial-products unit, Cassano, who ran the group until he stepped down in early 2008, knew them quite well. In good times, AIG’s massive CDS-issuance business minted money for the insurer’s other companies. But those same contracts turned out to be at the heart of AIG’s downfall and subsequent taxpayer rescue. So far, the U.S. government has invested and lent $150 billion to keep AIG afloat .

  8. Ian McCarthy
    Homebuilders had plenty to do with the collapse of the housing market, not just by building more homes than the country could stomach, but also by pressuring people who couldn’t really afford them to buy in. As CEO of Beazer Homes since 1994, McCarthy has become something of a poster child for the worst builder behaviors. An investigative series that ran in the Charlotte Observer in 2007 highlighted Beazer’s aggressive sales tactics, including lying about borrowers’ qualifications to help them get loans. The FBI, HUD and IRS are all investigating Beazer.

  9. Frank Raines
    The mess that Fannie Mae has become is the progeny of many parents: Congress, which created Fannie in 1938 and loaded it down with responsibilities; President Lyndon Johnson, who in 1968 pushed it halfway out the government nest and into a problematic part-private, part-public role in an attempt to reduce the national debt; and Jim Johnson, who presided over Fannie’s spectacular growth in the 1990s. But it was Johnson’s successor, Raines, who was at the helm when things really went off course. A former Clinton Administration Budget Director, Raines was the first African-American CEO of a Fortune 500 company when he took the helm in 1999. He left in 2004 with the company embroiled in an accounting scandal just as it was beginning to make big investments in subprime mortgage securities that would later sour.

  10. Kathleen Corbet
    By slapping AAA seals of approval on large portions of even the riskiest pools of loans, rating agencies helped lure investors into loading on collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) that are now unsellable. Corbet ran the largest agency, Standard & Poor’s, during much of this decade, though the other two major players, Moody’s and Fitch, played by similar rules. How could a ratings agency put its top-grade stamp on such flimsy securities? A glaring conflict of interest is one possibility: these outfits are paid for their ratings by the bond issuer.

The original article was published by TIME Magazine and can be viewed at www.time.com


What does the new federal housing tax credit mean for you?

Thursday, February 19th, 2009

In its efforts to stimulate the economy and revive the housing market, Congress has enacted legislation providing a tax credit of up to $8,000* for first-time home buyers.

But time is of the essence for buyers who want to take advantage of this opportunity. Only homes purchased on or after January 1, 2009 and before December 1, 2009 are eligible.

  

$8,000 Home Buyer Tax Credit at a Glance

  

· The tax credit is for first-time home buyers: defined as a purchaser not having owned a home within the previous 3-year period.

· The tax credit does not have to be repaid.

· The tax credit is equal to 10 percent of the home’s purchase price up to a maximum of $8,000.

· The credit is available for homes purchased on or after January 1, 2009 and before December 1, 2009.

· The tax credit can be claimed on 2008 income tax forms even if the purchase took place in 2009.

· Single taxpayers with incomes up to $75,000 and married couples with incomes up to $150,000 qualify for the full tax credit.

 

 

*visit www.federalhousingtaxcredit.com for more information

 

The Time is Now for Real Estate

Tuesday, February 17th, 2009
I found this article on Broker News- it is a great article about why now IS the time to buy real estate. I know consumer confidence is low right now but the reality is real estate is part of the american dream and you can’t realize your dreams until you get in the game!

This is the type of Real Estate market that two years from now everybody is going to say, “I wish I had bought then.”  All the factors are lining up for the next six to twelve months to be that year.  Let’s look at those factors. 

Financing
Interest rates are dropping below 6% on residential mortgage loans.  Rates are seldom that low and when they have reached that level, mortgage loan rates do not stay there for long.  According to HSH Associates, the nation’s largest publisher of consumer loan rates (HSH.com) from mid 2003 through mid 2005 rates hovered just above and below the 6% threshold, never below for more than a few months.  Before that they had not been below 6% for forty years.  The most likely conclusion is that mortgage loan rates will not stay below six for long.  So, Buyers would be wise to be actively looking to buy and take advantage very soon. 

Mortgage money is available.  Real Estate Agents and mortgage brokers from coast to coast are all telling me that there is money available with five percent down or less.  The Buyers do need to have steady employment, and a reasonable credit rating.  The days of Buyers needing to prove employment, have some cash on hand and credit worthiness have returned for good, hopefully.  Violating those obvious principles contributed enormously to our current global financial crisis.

Requiring stability of employment, credit and some cash is not the banks being cautious.  It is the way lenders have made decisions since paper money was invented.  The last ten years when those fundamentals were ignored have been the exception.  Bottom line, solid Buyers can get the best rates and buy at what I believe is at or near the bottom of the market.   

Inventory, Foreclosures and Pricing
New home inventories are being absorbed.  According to HWMarketIntelligence.com “the number of new homes for sale continues to steadily decline and have not recorded a monthly increase since May 2007.”  According to the Mortgage Bankers Association the number and rate of properties entering foreclosure is slowing. 

My anecdotal research from my Real Estate Agent Clients around the country is that the foreclosure properties are being purchased at a much higher rate as first time home Buyers and investors in market after market are deciding that we are near enough to bottom.

This Buyer and investor activity will create its own momentum.  As more Buyers and investors choose to buy now the demand they create will stabilize and lead to market appreciation.  Did people who bought at the height of the boom in late 2005 and 2006 lose equity?  In most markets yes, in some markets they lost a lot.  Are the Buyers who buy over the next year likely to be buying at the bottom of the market and benefit from excellent appreciation?  Every indication that I see says yes. 

As Real Estate Agents you need to decide if you are comfortable recommending that this is the time for Buyers to buy, that prices may be at or near the bottom.  I suggest that we are at or near the bottom and the Buyers you encourage to buy over the next twelve months will be forever grateful for your advice.

Some Considerations
The Real Estate market, specifically for residential homes is typically not a speculative market.  The vast majority of people buy a house to live in it as their home, not to resell it for a profit.  Over the last forty years Buyers have come to expect that their home will build equity and appreciate in value.  But, the decision to buy is usually based on factors other than anticipated appreciation.  The Buyers you encourage to buy want to own the space in which they live.  The fact that this is a fabulous time to make that decision just makes your job easier. 

Second, there is a continuous demand in most markets.  People graduate from school, get better jobs, get married and divorced, have children, upgrade and downsize, among dozens of other reasons that new Buyers come on the market.  These life events keep occurring.  However over the past two years these Buyers have paused.  They still want to buy but they are waiting.  Historically when there is a time that Buyers are reluctant to buy for any reason this creates a pent up demand. 

As Buyers realize that it is a good time to buy but not necessarily for Sellers to sell; demand will begin to absorb and exceed supply.  Over the next year or two the additional demand is likely to lead to a Seller’s market.  Because of the severity and magnitude of the current housing supply this turn to a Seller’s market will likely be gradual. 

The signs of this shift are occurring now, that is, the supply of new construction and foreclosure homes are being absorbed by first time Buyers, investors, and secure homeowners taking advantage of their financial strength.  This spring may be the tipping point when market activity flourishes.  I believe it will.  

Inflation: The X Factor
I remember a rapidly inflationary period.  I remember it for a funny reason.  I used to drink a lot of Coca Cola.  One day when I put a quarter into the machine to vend my Coke I realized that it was going to cost me forty cents.  Soon after that it was fifty cents and within five years it was seventy five cents.  Now it is at least a dollar.  This is inflation.  Your money buys less and the cost of what you buy increases.

If you owned Real Estate during this same period you were very happy because the property you owned in 1981 also doubled in price or more by 1986.  That is true even if you didn’t live in a highly populated area.  This inflationary period did not discriminate by locale. 

Are we on the verge of another inflationary surge?  I don’t know.  I have been reading what I can find on this and it seems to be a largely ignored topic.  I notice that gas prices are declining but not much else.  I think about the trillions of dollars worldwide being spent on the bailout.  The definition of inflation is when the amount of money in circulation increases and the available goods decreases.  It seems to me that is what is happening. 

If inflation does devalue our money then house prices, along with the price of almost all other hard goods will increase and this year’s Buyers are going to get benefit tremendously.  Whether this happens or not it is time for buyers to get in the market. 

First Time Buyers and Investors
For certain Buyers it is time to get active.  I am saying to anyone and everyone that will listen.  FIRST TIME BUYERS THIS IS YOUR TIME!  The federal government is still offering a $7,500 tax credit that is scheduled to conclude in the summer of 2009.  Prices and interest rates are down.  If you are employed and credit worthy you can buy with a small amount of cash out of pocket.  FIRST TIME BUYERS THIS IS YOUR TIME!

Another group that I am encouraging to buy now is investors of residential rental property.  Investors still have to do their investment analysis.  They still have to carefully look at occupancy and vacancy rates.  In other words, investors have to make smart, calculated buying decisions.  This is always the case.
The reason it is a good time for these investors is because the market is soft. 

As long as there has not been a population exodus in your community, that is, as long as people are choosing to live in your community and employment is stable, the rental property is going to sustain value.  At the same time market conditions right now, with more challenging underwriting standards and only those who really need to sell putting their property on the market creates the opportunity all investors are looking for, buy low, particularly those with some cash. 

Get in the Game
So, I have been telling my Agent Clients and my audiences to shout from the rooftops that first time Buyers and investors should get in the game.  Call the people in your spheres of influence and your past Clients and be honest with them about whether it is a good time to sell. 

At the same time encourage them to tell their relatives, friends and any one that they care about that if they are first time Buyers to call you and start looking.  If they are investors with some cash suggest that they start looking for golden opportunities with you.

Look for articles from legitimate sources about what is going on with the global financial crisis.  But then look at your local market and discover the opportunities for first time Buyers, investors or any other group or type of property that may be a shining beacon through the fog.

Be the optimistic and intelligent voice of opportunity and you will both survive this market you will become a roaring success as the market improves; which it will.  When?  For most markets, the prediction is late 2009.  For some it will be spring of 2009 and for others it will be longer. 

I have led Agents to success in four of these major shifts since 1979.  Every one of these soft markets creates strength in those that survive it.  And those who survive it by discovering the opportunities for their Clients become the highest producers and the leaders of the healthy market that is likely to be just around the corner.  

Information on 2009 Tax Credit for Homebuyers

Monday, February 16th, 2009

More great info from my favorite lender- Keith Spain!

In hopes of spurring the housing industry, the recently enacted “American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009” (the 2009 economic stimulus act) includes an enhanced tax credit for first-time homebuyers. Here are the details.

You may remember that last year’s Housing Act included a tax credit giving first-time homebuyers up to a $7,500 (actually, 10% of the purchase price or $7,500, whichever is less) credit for buying a home between April 8, 2008, and July 1, 2009, with single taxpayers with incomes up to $75,000 and married couples with incomes up to $150,000 qualifying for the full tax credit. However, despite high hopes that the credit would be effective in getting people to buy homes and thereby reduce the excessive inventory on the market, the credit is widely acknowledged to have failed in its objective. The problem, according to realtors and industry officials, was that buyers were turned off by the odd way the credit worked. While the credit functioned initially like other tax credits, reducing a person’s tax liability on a dollar-for-dollar basis, it was unusual in that, unlike other federal tax credits (for example, the child credit), the credit for first-time homebuyers had to be paid back to the government ratably over a period of 15 years (or earlier if the house is sold). So, as a practical matter, the credit was the equivalent of an interest-free loan from the government. It was the payback requirement that many in the industry felt kept potential buyers on the sidelines. Now, Congress has beefed up the credit in renewed optimism of enticing more first-time homebuyers to take the plunge. First and foremost, the new legislation scuttles the repayment requirement for homes purchased on or after January 1, 2009. The new law also extends the credit through the end of November 2009, and bumps up the maximum credit amount from $7,500 to $8,000. However, the new law retains the recapture provisions if the house is sold within three years of purchase.

 

Keith Spain

Vice President

Fannie Mae - Rule Change: Allows Investors to own up to 10 financed properties!

Monday, February 16th, 2009

My favortite lender Keith Spain has shared some important info regarding investment lending! Thanks Keith!

More information on Fannie’s investor rule change. ..

Last year, Fannie Mae rules were changed to limit investors to having a maximum of four mortgages outstanding. That rule, in effect, limited investors to owning four properties. As discussed in our classes, the rule exacerbated the over-supply situation and slowed the market’s ability to absorb the standing supply of housing. It was a bad rule with bad timing and AREA encouraged real estate agents and appraisers to voice opposition to the rule.

Congratulations! Your voices were heard. Fannie Mae changed its rule. The change is more in line with the traditional banking industry rules which allow investors to own and finance up to 10 one to four family properties. The new rule requires the investor to make a 25% down payment and have a credit score of at least 720.

Additional requirements to be met for the fifth to the tenth house include the following:

  • No bankruptcy or foreclosure within past 7 years,
  • No delinquencies longer than 30 days in the past 12 months,
  • Must be able to document income from the new property as well as existing rentals,
  • Must provide release of income tax returns for prior two years, and
  • Must maintain reserves for the new property and existing rentals

The entire rule can be found in Announcement 09-02 at eFannieMae.com. This is good news for the real estate industry. It will help the recovery, encourage more real estate sales, and create more work for agents, appraisers, and home inspectors.

 

Let me know of any questions you may have.

 

Keith Spain

Vice President

LoanSouth Mortgage

Better Biz Bureau Warns Consumers on Going-out-of-Business Sales

Tuesday, February 10th, 2009

§ TThe Better Business Bureau is warning shoppers to keep their eyes open for false deals when heading to going-out-of-business sales.

The consumer advocacy group noted the recent bankruptcies and liquidation sales of national retailers Linens-N-Things and Circuit City following a lackluster sales in 2008. When a retailer such as Circuit City liquidates its assets, the actual sale is run by a liquidator that will set the prices and attempt to sell the items quickly and at the highest profit. As a result, some items will actually be marked up for the sale, BBB warned.

In 2008, an ABC News report revealed many items sold during Linens-n-Things’ liquidation sale were marked up by as much as 14 percent. And according to a mystery shopping trip by Consumer Reports, Circuit City’s liquidation sale included such “deals” as a big-screen TV that had been marked up by more than $400 dollars and computer printers that had been marked up by as much as 100 percent, BBB noted.

“In this economy, we’re all looking for bargains,” said Fred T. Elsberry Jr., president and CEO of the BBB Serving Metro Atlanta, Athens and Northeast Georgia, in a news release. “Unfortunately, the bargains are not always as advertised at going-out-of business sales and some consumers don’t realize they’re getting ripped off when they’re supposed to be getting a deal.”

The BBB said consumers should confirm that a deal really is a deal, use credit card since they include built-in consumer protections, know the status on warranties, use gift cards quickly after a retailer announces liquidation and don’t expect a high level of customer service. 

February 4, 2009  BBB